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Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project University of Maine Maine Department of Transportation

Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project University of Maine Maine Department of Transportation. Project Goals

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Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project University of Maine Maine Department of Transportation

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  1. Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project University of Maine Maine Department of Transportation

  2. Project Goals • Develop among stakeholders a common understanding of the public policy issues and the relationships of funding, current research, levels of service, and risks associated with the use of road salt. • Inform the policy making process in Maine related to winter road maintenance practices. Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  3. GOOD NEWS Level of Service = High Public Safety = Improved (causal link unclear) Environment = Less Sand/Silt in Runoff Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  4. GOOD NEWS Level of Service = High Public Safety = Improved (causal link unclear) Environment = Less Sand/Silt in Runoff BAD NEWS Level of Service = High Cost Public Safety = Corrosion (vehicle/infrastructure) Environment = Salt Effects Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  5. UMaine Project Research Team • Per Garder, Professor of Civil Engineering • T. Olaf Johnson, Graduate Research Assistant, Department of Civil Engineering • Margaret McKee, Research Associate, Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center • Charles Morris, Senior Research Associate, Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center • Kenneth Nichols, Professor of Public Administration • John Peckenham, Director, Maine Water Research Institute & Senior Research Scientist, Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Environmental and Watershed Research • Jonathan Rubin, Professor of Resource Economics & Policy, School of Economics & Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center • Adam Stern, Graduate Research Assistant,School of Economics Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  6. Project Advisory Committee • AAA • Federal Highway Administration • Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration • Maine Auto Dealers Association • Maine Chapter of American Public Works Association • Maine Chiefs of Police Association • Maine Custom Auto Association • Maine Department of Environmental Protection • Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife • Maine Department of Public Safety • Maine Department of Transportation • Maine Fire Chiefs Association • Maine Motor Transport Association • Maine Municipal Association • Maine State Legislature • Maine Town and City Management Association • Maine Turnpike Authority • U.S. Department of Transportation • U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Discipline Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  7. Maine Roads 22,830 miles of public roads • MaineDOT 4,164 mi. (18%) • MTA 635 lane miles • 488 towns/cities • 3 reservations • counties

  8. Maine Winter • 20-40 storms November to late April • Salt preferred chemical since 1930s • Readily available • Effective • Relatively low-cost Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  9. Snow Removal Practices De-icing • Plow after 1-2 inches. Spread sand and salt mix • Remove snow pack (salt) • Clean up sand at end of season Disadvantages of Sand • Build up & drainage problems on roads • Siltation of waterways • Air quality issues • Benefit is temporary. No melting properties • Skidding hazard on pavement • High cost of storage, handling Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  10. Anti-Icing 1996 FHWA SHRP Anti-Icing Manual of Practice • Pre-Wet Solids • Pre-Treat Roads MaineDOT initiated in late 1990s (salt priority) • Mostly salt • Requires accurate forecasting, timing • Bare pavement sooner after storms Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  11. Current Practices MaineDOT • Anti-icing 95% • Salt is still most effective choice above 15o • Pre-wetting salt with brine, with Ice-B-Gone, & with blend • Pre-treating small percentage of roads Municipal/County • Practices vary widely • Sand and Salt  Liquids • De-Icing  Anti-Icing and Pre-Treating Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  12. Materials • Salt(NaCl) • Winter Sand(mixed with salt) • Salt Brine(23% salt in water, for pre-wetting or pre-treating) • Chlorides • Calcium Chloride (CaCl2) • Magnesium Chloride (MgCl2) Ice-B-Gone(MgCl2 blend with by-product of alcohol distillation process) • Acetates • Potassium Acetate (KA) • Calcium Magnesium Acetate (CMA) • Carbohydrate based solutions • Corn, Beet, Grains

  13. Salt Usage in Maine 2008-09 * ** *estimate based on survey data **based on national estimate(USGS) Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  14. Municipal Practices: Percent Using These Materials winter 2008-09 Source: survey data

  15. Level of Service (MaineDOT) • Priority 1 (26%) 6 daylight hours to bare pavement, plow cycle 1 to 1 ½ hours 40-45 mph Route length 10 centerline miles • Priority 2 (36%) 8 daylight hours, plow cycle 1 ½ to 2 hours 35-40 mph Route length 12 centerline miles • Priority 3 (38%) 24 hours, plow cycle 1 ½ to 2 hours 35 mph Route length 14 centerline miles Source: MaineDOT

  16. Level of Service: Municipal Source: survey data Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  17. Municipal Total Winter Maintenance Expenditures per Mile 2008-09 Source:l survey data

  18. Municipal Practices:Winter Maintenance Budgets Personnel Equipment Materials Source: survey data Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  19. Material Cost MaineDOT Source: MaineDOT

  20. Material Cost MTA Source: Maine Turnpike Authority

  21. Total Winter Maintenance Expenditures 2008-2009 * *estimate based on survey data

  22. Factors in snow control policy • Level of Service • Temperature • Speed of response • Availability & amount of material • Melting properties • Cost • Equipment, training • Infrastructure & environmental impact • Driver reaction to snow clearing • Vehicle condition Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  23. Road Salt Effects On Environmental Quality Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  24. OUTLINE • Water Cycle • Fate of Road Salt • Environmental Receptors • Pathways • Mass Balances • Summary of Research • Water Quality • Ecosystems • Trends • Summary and Conclusions Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  25. Road Salt - Environmental Receptors Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  26. Road Salt – Pathways to Environmental Receptors Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  27. Road Salt – Mass Balances Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  28. NaCl + H2O Na+ + Cl- aqueous Ca2+ 2Na+ Mg2+ 2Na+ K+ Na+ H+ Na+ Ion Exchange In soil Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  29. Road Salt and Water Quality • Short Term • Increased Na and Cl in surface waters • Long Term • Increased Na and Cl in ground waters • Increased salinity of ponds • Soil chemistry change through ion exchange -release of Ca and Mg then H (acidification) • Soil “stores” salt and releases it over time • Trends • Increased Na and Cl in surface waters (0.2 to 2 mg/L/yr) • Increases persist for months to decades • Occurrence of high salt waters limited to near roads and storage areas Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  30. Road Salt and Ecosystem Quality • Short Term • Increased attraction of salt-loving species • Foliar burning • Loss of salt sensitive species (plant and animal) • Long Term • Decrease in surface water diversity • Dominance by salt-tolerant invasive species (e.g. phragmites) • Vernal pool decline • Toxic thresholds exceeded for sensitive species • Trends • Loss of overall diversity • Increases in invasive species (plants) • Ecological footprint ~ 600 meters wide Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  31. Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  32. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS • Road Salt Affects Water Quality and Ecosystems (600 m) • Seasonal Effects- Larger Magnitude, Shorter Duration • Chronic Effects- Lower Magnitude, Longer Duration • Reversibility • Seasonal Effects are mostly reversible • Chronic Effects- Require years to decades to change Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  33. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS • Trends • Increase in Chloride in surface waters and ground water • Cation exchange leads to nutrient depletion and acidification of soil and water • Loss of biodiversity • Increased prevalence of invasive species Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  34. Infrastructure Corrosion Bridges • 2,279 bridges in Maine • 649 “structurally deficient or functionally obsolete” 28% (2007) • 386 MaineDOT Watch List (2008) Pathways of corrosion • Corrosion of steel • React with cement paste • Physical impact on cement (atmospheric) Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  35. Infrastructure Corrosion • Increase # of freeze/thaw cycles. • All chlorides equally high in corrosion of rebar. • MgCl2 and acetates highest impact on paste deterioration. • All chlorides high impact on atmospheric corrosion, with CaCl2 and MgCl2 higher due to retention of moisture. NCHRP Study 577 (2008) Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  36. Vehicle Corrosion Trucking Industry: “rust jacking” Automobiles: brake lines & electrical connectors Photo courtesy of Jeremy Williams Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  37. Vehicle Corrosion Issues: Multiple types of corrosion Variety of metals and alloys in vehicles Environmental factors Chemical factors Field tests vs. laboratory tests Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  38. Hexavalent Chromium End-of-Life Vehicle Directive, July 2007 deadline Eliminated: • 1990s Volvo, Opel • 2003-2006 GM • 2004-06 VW • 2005 Ford • 2006 Toyota, Hyundai • 2007 Nissan, DaimlerChrysler Alternatives? Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  39. Conclusions Chloride-based salts are all corrosive to motor vehicle components in laboratory tests. Magnesium and calcium chlorides retain moisture longer. Inconsistency of laboratory results means no risk ranking of chemicals possible. (Fay, 2009) Diffusion of chloride into porous materials is linked to moisture. Field conditions may contribute more to relative corrosiveness than chemical or coating. (NCHRP, 2008) Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  40. Road Salt Safety Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  41. Data All police reported accidents in Maine from 1989-2008. Annual estimated vehicle miles traveled (VMT) for all individual counties in Maine as well as state totals. Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  42. Crashes by Road Surface Condition1989-2008 Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  43. County Crash Rates1989-2008 Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  44. 5000 4500 2000 4000 3500 2002 3000 2004 2500 2000 2006 1500 1000 2008 500 0 July May June April March August October January February December November September Total Crashes Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  45. Fatality Rates Compared Winter conditions Dry Pavement Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  46. Maine & US Crash Rates1989-2008 Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  47. Costs of Accidents • Maine accident data shows a 10 year average cost of $1.5 billion dollars annually • Cost per accident measured in constant $2008 • The total number of accidents has fallen 26% over the decade. • Possible reasons: driver behavior, vehicle technology, road way improvements, winter maintenance. Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Project  University of Maine  September 2009

  48. Thank you University of Maine Road Salt Risk Assessment Team http://mcspolicycenter.umaine.edu/?q=RoadSalt Maine Department of Transportation

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